A new contraceptive technology may advance the science of family planning but may do little to affect health if potential users do not deem it an acceptable method. The authors conducted an acceptability study of a newly developed contraceptive method--personal hormone monitoring. A sample of 480 English volunteers present at the 6th month of a 13-month longitudinal study completed surveys regarding their attitudes toward a personal hormone monitor for the purpose of contraception. The authors used the participants' responses to determine (a) the extent to which the participants accepted the monitor, (b) how their ratings of acceptability changed over time, (c) the extent to which contextual variables predicted changes in acceptability over time, and (d) whether those contextual variables predicted final acceptability of the monitor. Results suggested that no single method of family planning is best for everyone and specified the people for whom personal hormone monitoring may be most suitable.
personal hormone monitoring contraception acceptability, hormone monitor family planning attitudes, fertility awareness monitor user acceptance, contraceptive technology acceptability study, hormone monitoring contraception longitudinal study, personal hormone device family planning, fertility monitor contraceptive method satisfaction, hormonal monitoring contraception attitudes, electronic fertility monitor acceptability
Cite this article
Severy, L. J., Klein, C. T., & McNulty, J. (2002). Acceptability of personal hormone monitoring for contraception: longitudinal and contextual variables. *The Journal of social psychology*, *142*(1), 87-96. https://doi.org/10.1080/00224540209603887
Severy LJ, Klein CT, McNulty J. Acceptability of personal hormone monitoring for contraception: longitudinal and contextual variables. J Soc Psychol. 2002;142(1):87-96. doi:10.1080/00224540209603887
Severy, L. J., et al. "Acceptability of personal hormone monitoring for contraception: longitudinal and contextual variables." *The Journal of social psychology*, vol. 142, no. 1, 2002, pp. 87-96.
France M et al., 1997Advances in Contraception : the Official Journal of the Society for the Advancement of Contraception
This study has determined long-term continuation rates of clients who attended clinics of the New Zealand Association of Natural Family Planning and became autonomous users. It has also identified fac...
Psychological data was obtained from 1009 couples located in 5 countries who were practicing the temperature-rhythm method of birth control. In the U.S., survey instruments were distributed to 160 cou...
Stanford JB, 2025
Open Access
Journal of Restorative Reproductive Medicine
Welcome to the Journal of Restorative Reproductive Medicine, the official journal of the International Institute for Restorative Reproductive Medicine! JRRM is a peer-reviewed, open-access medical jou...
Objective: To assess the impact of a Shared Decision-Making (SDM) tool for fertility awareness-based methods (FABMs) of family planning.
Methods: Clinicians familiar with at least one FABM were random...
RRM Methods > General FABM > TeachingBody Literacy > Education > Professional TrainingBody Literacy > Patient Empowerment > Informed Decision-Making